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Tracy Gill works for NASA at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in the Research and Technology Management Office as a Technology Strategy Manager. In this capacity, he is responsible for top level strategic planning of KSC investments in research and technology areas of the NASA Technology Area roadmaps and coordinating those efforts across multiple projects and organizations.

Tracy holds a BS in Electrical Engineering and an MS in Aerospace and Mechanical Systems from the University of Florida, an MS in Space Systems from Florida Tech, and is a graduate of the International Space University (ISU) Summer Session Program in 2006. He served as visiting faculty for ISU in 2012 and in 201, he was named as an adjunct professor for the International Space University.

Tracy has nearly 20 years of Shuttle and ISS payload processing experience. Through Spacelab and ISS Utilization payload processing activities, Tracy has worked extensively with employees and contractors from other NASA field centers, from universities, and from international engineering teams from the European Space Agency (ESA), Italy, Germany, France, Canada, and Japan.

This work was in preparing payloads for launch on projects such as the German Spacelab D2 mission, several international Spacelab missions, the Japanese Manipulator Flight Demonstrator, the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 payload, ISS Expedite the Processing of Experiments to Space Station (ExPRESS) Racks, and several ESA provided ISS racks such as the Microgravity Science Glovebox and the Minus Eighty Laboratory Freezer for ISS.

Prior to his involvement with the Research and Technology Management Office, Tracy was also involved on the Constellation program supporting the Orion, Ground Operations, Altair, and Lunar Surface Systems projects, developing initial requirements and planning concepts of operations. After Constellation, he was a deputy project manager for the Habitat Demonstration Unit (HDU) project.

He was responsible for leading members of a multi-center team, designing and building a habitat system to support analog testing of advanced habitation systems. In this capacity, he led the systems integration effort, defining how sub-systems would be installed and configured and how they worked together to satisfy the requirements of the habitat prototype.

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From Earth to the ISS to the Moon and Mars: Development Considerations for Space Habitation and Current Efforts at NASA (Slides + Video) (ZIP) (328.6 MB)

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Publication Date

4-28-2014

City

Grand Forks, ND

Recommended Citation

Gill, Tracy R., "From Earth to the ISS to the Moon and Mars: Development Considerations for Space Habitation and Current Efforts at NASA" (2014). Space Studies Colloquium. 34.
https://commons.und.edu/ss-colloquium/34